As we know:
1. It is impossible
2. It is possible but not important
3. We invented it. '-)

You come back with that line even when exact dated prior art is shown to you.

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"The question of who is right and who is wrong has seemed to me always too small to be worth a moment's thought, while the question of what is right and what is wrong has seemed all-important."

being able to use the better performance positive linear regulators for both polarities is a handy split sec/dual bridge feature

but in a preamp avoiding most of the single bridge-CT common impedance noise isn't that hard with intelligent layout, routing, choice of gnd points - in power amps the currents are a little large for doing it right with just pcb trace - but still can be largely attenuated compared to naive implementations

but treating it as a pro level audio amp design secret when the issue is shown in Self, Cordell books is a little behind the times - either nih syndrome or once again propping up a strawman version of what "conventional enigeering" knows, even modestly well read interested audio amp designers should have seen

No, we are not talking about ground resistance issues.

The noise under discussion is coming from the AC line. When you use the dual bridges, the diodes only pass current and noise during a small part of the cycle. That is shown in the last two spectrums I posted. It is about 10 db less noise that gets through. That is not corrected by layout.

Where is this feature covered in Self or Cordell? I have a nice collection of engineering books. I haven't seen that in any of them. Which ones address the issue?

Do you want to expand on why using a half bridge from a center tapped transformer as shown earlier has DC issues?

Maybe SY or Scott could tell us the technique to reduce the line noise on a center tapped transformer and where it first appears?

and an estimate of how bad your amp's psrr has to be to hear the effect in music (related Q: can you hear a Sousa March at -60 dB?)

All the noise from the AC line that is coupled through the transformer goes straight into your ground plane. It is there for 100% of the time. With the diodes in the bridge they only conduct 30% of the time so you have 10 db less noise.

Look at the actual measurements!

For a first level sim as you show you would have to model a noise source and the layout inductances and capacitances.

Why don't you build an amplifier with 60 db of S/N ratio and let me know how it sounds?

The S/N reference you site always keeps the noise 60 db below the program. Now all you need to do is modulate the noise to stay 60 db down as your program level changes to get the same effect.

All the noise from the AC line that is coupled through the transformer goes straight into your ground plane. It is there for 100% of the time. With the diodes in the bridge they only conduct 30% of the time so you have 10 db less noise.

Look at the actual measurements!

It was unclear to me also, but is now making sense. I'd be interested if there is more to the story.

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It is error only, and not truth, that shrinks from enquiry. - Thomas Paine

I still don't understand what you're getting at - pri-sec are isolated, have some interwinding coupling C

modified the above linked sim, separated sec - conduction angle looks pretty similar - summing the current with proper wiring, hierarchical gnd still works as far as I can see...

please do tell what more is needed to see your point - and its relative magnitude

in my house I only practically "have" to keep the noise 60 dB below reproduced audio output down to ~70-80 dB SPL - do you listen in a anechoic chamber - to minutes of silence?
but I like as evidence of technical competence to do much better than -100 dB re fs for power line artiacts

I still don't understand what you're getting at - pri-sec are isolated, have some interwinding coupling C, do you mean you omitted the line side EMI filter?

line noise still capacitively couples 100% of the time through the bridge's diodes, and you have 2x bridges, EI split bobbin can have low pri-sec C - same order as bridge diode C -so not much savings is possible

the conduction angle comment has me totally confused

modified the above linked sim, separated sec - conduction angle looks pretty similar - summing the current with proper wiring, hierarchical gnd still works as far as I can see...

please do tell what more is needed to see your point - and its relative magnitude

in my house I only practically "have" to keep the noise 60 dB below reproduced audio output down to ~70-80 dB SPL - do you listen in a anechoic chamber - to minutes of silence?
but I like as evidence of technical competence to do much better than -100 dB re fs for power line artiacts